Take a look at this week's top VPM News stories.
Spotlight on VPM Original Content
Virginia News
NPR News
Virginia News
-
Staff raised various concerns in a 2024 letter sent to Board of Visitors
-
Lawmakers forwarded contraception, probation, collective bargaining proposals
-
Interpretation of former SCHEV guidance has been inconsistent across Virginia colleges.
-
Served in interim capacity following Bingham’s January departure
-
The U.S. Senator can pay the judgment, claim an exemption or appear in a Harrisonburg court.
-
State lawmakers wait on congressional budget negotiations.
NPR News
-
An NPR listener writes: "We live in a nice neighborhood that has homeowner association rules, and our neighbor is violating them." Social etiquette experts weigh in.
-
Irsay started with the Colts as a teenage ball boy and took ownership after his father's death in 1997. The team won a Super Bowl and two AFC championships under his nearly three-decade tenure.
-
In a cost-cutting move, the U.S. Treasury will stop minting new pennies. Originally introduced in 1793, the one-cent coins will still be legal tender. There are more than 100 billion pennies in circulation.
-
The federal judge also told the administration to reinstate department employees who lost their jobs during the reduction-in-force announced in March.
-
The Senate parliamentarian advised lawmakers that they couldn't use the Congressional Review Act to revoke California's right to set vehicle standards. But they did it anyway. Expect a legal fight.